Native to Central America, red button ginger is a flowering ginger, including 52 genera and more than 1,300 species. Space each rhizome at least 18 to 24 inches apart when planting—doing so reduces the need to divide plants in the future. It looks great alongside plants with similar growing conditions, such as mondo grass, bush lily, hosta, Brunfelsia, and aralia.

Light

Red button ginger grows in partial sun or partial shade. Plant your red button ginger somewhere that receives at least four hours of direct sunlight each day. Red button ginger is also susceptible to sunburn if it’s in direct sunlight for too long, so if you can offer it some afternoon shade, that would be best.

Soil

Plant your red button ginger in a soil mixture that is moist but well-draining. It will thrive best in a rich and moderately fertile soil mix. You can increase the nutritional value of your soil by amending it with organic matter. Additionally, red button ginger can thrive in a soil mixture with a soil pH level that ranges from neutral to acidic.

Water

Red button ginger plants love water and should be soaked regularly to maintain moist soil, requiring at least one inch of water per week. A once-weekly deep watering is sufficient in most climates, but you might need to increase your watering cadence in especially hot or dry weather. Ultimately, never let the soil dry out completely.

Temperature and Humidity

Red button ginger loves warm and humid temperatures due to its tropical nature. If temperatures remain above 50 degrees Fahrenheit throughout the year, there’s a good chance it will flower continuously. Red button ginger is more hardy than it’s given credit for, and it can survive (though not flower) during chilly temperatures. After light frosts, it generally wilts and bounces back. After a hard freeze, it can sometimes grow back from its root system.

Fertilizer

Your red button ginger plant can thrive without fertilizer if you’ve planted it in enriched soil with organic matter like compost. But, for an extra boost, you can periodically feed it a balanced, liquid fertilizer blend once a month.

Types of Red Button Ginger

Two types of Costus woodsonii include the primary specimen and the dwarf type. More than 150 species belong to the Costus or spiral ginger genus.

Costus woodsonii ‘Dwarf French Kiss’: Smaller, more compact variety, grows from 24 to 36 inches tall; orange-red flowersCostus comosus var. bakeri or Red Tower Ginger: Formerly Costus barbatus; perennial grows six feet tall in zones 9 to 11Costus specious or Crepe Ginger: Widely grown, Malay ginger (or crepe ginger) is root-hardy; ruffled three-inch white to pale pink flowers with a yellow center; leaves are up to 12 inches long with fine, short-haired undersides; cultivar ‘Variegatus’ (sometimes called variegated crepe ginger) has large, soft, variegated leaves on red stems emerging from the ground

Pruning

Regularly pruning red button ginger throughout the year keeps disease and overgrowth in check. Foliage damage can occur during periods of drought or frost. If leaves or stems appear discolored, use sterilized pruning shears to remove the damaged branches or leaves. Deadhead or remove faded flowers by snipping or pulling off the dead flowers from their base. Also, cut or remove dead, browned leaves at the stem. Prune the tops of any drooping stems. To keep a plant from overgrowing its location, use pruners to trim it to the desired height and width. Snip off any remaining leaves and stem offshoots that make the plant too wide. If pruning right before winter, cut the stem down to the ground; it will have a better chance of surviving the cold and re-flowering in the spring.

Propagating Red Button Ginger

To propagate red button ginger, you can use division, stem cuttings, or separate offshoots from the parent plant and replant them in a separate container. It doesn’t matter the time of year you propagate if environment conditions are right. However, spring is generally regarded as the best time of year for propagation. When pruning to thin out your bushy plants, you can use healthy stem cuttings to grow additional red button ginger plants. However, root division is the fastest and easiest method of reproduction. The root of red button ginger is a rhizome—a thickened tuberous-looking root that grows horizontally just under the soil surface. If your plant is in a container, you likely need to repot it because it’s a fast-growing plant that quickly outgrows its container each year. Instead of repotting your plant, you can divide it, giving you two plants instead of one. Similarly, if your plant is planted in the ground, you can control its size by dividing it. To propagate by stem cutting: To propagate by root division or offshoots:

How to Grow Red Button Ginger From Seed

The plant’s white fruit produces black seeds, which, in the wild, are eaten and spread by birds. This plant reliably reproduces by seed. Seeds are harder to source. And, plants grown from seeds can take two to three years before flowering. In general, stem cutting and division are faster routes of propagation.

Potting and Repotting Red Button Ginger

If you’re choosing to pot up your red button ginger, group several plants together in large containers that are at least three gallons in size with multiple holes to allow for excellent drainage. It’s a vigorous grower and will likely need repotting annually. Keep the same pot, add fresh soil, and divide the rhizome to propagate new plants. In cooler parts of the world, red button ginger can be cared for indoors as a houseplant. Keep in mind that plants grown outdoors in a container will dry out more quickly, so increase your watering schedule to at least once a week (maybe even twice, depending on the climate, amount of sunlight, and size of the plant).

Overwintering

Red button ginger is cold tolerant to 30 degrees Fahrenheit with mulch protection against frost. Though the plant can tolerate a light frost for short periods, if it is exposed to freezing temperatures, mulch the roots heavily to protect plants from freezing or bring the plant indoors to overwinter. Water and feed sparingly during the cold months and maintain temperatures above 50 degrees Farhenheit, if possible; otherwise, it will not flower. In subtropical climates, the plant will go dormant in the winter but will return with the warm weather.

Common Pests

While it’s generally resistant to disease, red button ginger can be a bit of a magnet for pests. When growing it in your garden, it can be infested with insects such as aphids, scale, mealybug, cardamom thrips, Chinese rose beetle, slugs, and more. While there is no single remedy that will eliminate all these pests, you can control pests with a horticultural oil like neem oil. Additionally, other natural pest control methods, like introducing ladybugs to your garden or manually removing the insects from the plants, can help. Insecticides are also an option, though there probably isn’t a blend that will control all these pests at once.

How to Get Red Button Ginger to Bloom

Red button ginger has exotic, vibrant yellow-orange, waxy spiraling blooms along thick, upright stems. Its flowers are not known for being fragrant, but it produces extra floral nectar from flower spikes, attracting ants that harvest the nectar. In turn, the ants protect the plant from the larvae of flies and other flying insects that lay their eggs in the flowers. If its conditions are suitable, red button ginger will bloom year-round. If your plant has problems blooming, make sure that it is not exposed to temperatures below 50 degrees Fahrenheit. To maintain its blooms or increase the chances of flowering, bring the plant indoors during the winter season. If you want an increased chance of flower production, select a fertilizer higher in phosphorus. Deadheading makes the plant tidy, but it does not encourage new blooms.

Common Problems With Red Button Ginger

Red button ginger is relatively disease- and pest-free. A change in environmental conditions might result in some health issues.

Browning on Leaf Edges

If your plant develops brown leaf edges, it might be because it has been underwatered or is exposed to cold temperatures or drafts. Provide more water, raise the humidity, remove from drafts, or bring the plant indoors to remedy the condition. If all growing conditions are adequate, you can feed it with a balanced fertilizer to help the leaves rebound. It’s normal for a red button ginger’s leaves to turn brown and die back once temperatures plunge lower than 50 degrees Fahrenheit.

Leaves Curling or Rolling

Bacterial wilt causes leaves to curl and roll, first starting with the lower leaves. The leaves can turn yellow then brown within three to four days as the disease progresses. Early shoots can become soft and rotted. You might also have stunted growth and a waterlogged, grayish-brown discoloration of the rhizomes and stems. In severe cases, the rhizome will rot. If it is infected with bacterial wilt, you’ll notice a slimy ooze when you make a small cut to a stem at the base of the plant.

Plant Turning Yellow

Bacterial wilt can turn a plant yellow, but leaves will quickly brown. Another reason for full-on leaf yellowing is dry rot or rhizome rot. It’s a fungal disease that usually occurs after too much watering, soggy soil, or overly humid conditions. If your plant has this disease—which leads to mushy, decomposing root rot—you will need to pull up the plant and destroy it. This fungal disease is soil-borne and can affect nearby plants.